In the wake of a series of scandals, FIFA officials have vehemently insisted that football’s governing body does not engage in corrupt practices or criminal activity. Now that a museum dedicated to organized crime is putting the organization front and center, it’s even harder to take those claims seriously.

On Tuesday, the Mob Museum in downtown Las Vegas opened a new exhibit highlighting the recent corruption scandals tied to FIFA. The exhibit, titled “The ‘Beautiful Game’ Turns Ugly,” aims to take the ripped-from-the-headlines controversy surrounding soccer’s global governing body and place it in the context of the wider history of racketeering and fraud.

Geoff Schumacher, the content director for the museum, says that the new exhibit represents something of a departure from their usual programming. “It just looks a little different. You don’t have Lucky Luciano or Meyer Lansky. These are not household names today.”

The exhibit comes on the heels of FIFA’s ongoing corruption scandal, which has forced Sepp Blatter into stepping down from office sometime next year and the organization putting together a reform committee in a desperate attempt to change its image. Meanwhile, the US Department of Justice is continuing to investigate the organization and its leadership, with disgraced former FIFA and CONCACAF official Chuck Blazer assisting the investigation.

The exhibit will run through January 1st on the museum’s first floor, and is free with the cost of admission.